US4376952A - Noise responsive automatic peaking control apparatus - Google Patents
Noise responsive automatic peaking control apparatus Download PDFInfo
- Publication number
- US4376952A US4376952A US06/288,627 US28862781A US4376952A US 4376952 A US4376952 A US 4376952A US 28862781 A US28862781 A US 28862781A US 4376952 A US4376952 A US 4376952A
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- Prior art keywords
- signal
- noise
- luminance
- peaking
- luminance signal
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04N—PICTORIAL COMMUNICATION, e.g. TELEVISION
- H04N5/00—Details of television systems
- H04N5/14—Picture signal circuitry for video frequency region
- H04N5/20—Circuitry for controlling amplitude response
- H04N5/205—Circuitry for controlling amplitude response for correcting amplitude versus frequency characteristic
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04N—PICTORIAL COMMUNICATION, e.g. TELEVISION
- H04N5/00—Details of television systems
- H04N5/14—Picture signal circuitry for video frequency region
- H04N5/21—Circuitry for suppressing or minimising disturbance, e.g. moiré or halo
Definitions
- This invention relates to video signal processing apparatus and particularly to apparatus for automatically controlling peaking of a luminance signal in accordance with the level of noise which may accompany the signal.
- the AGC voltage of a television receiver has been found to fairly reflect the quality of television signals received from a source such as an antenna, it is recognized herein that it does not consistently provide a good indication of signal-to-noise ratio where the signal is provided by a video accessory (e.g., a tape or disc player) of the type in which the RF (radio frequency) output signal is effectively regulated at a substantially constant level.
- the AGC voltage may remain substantially constant regardless of the quality (noise level) of the signal supplied to the receiver so that the advantages of automatic control of peaking are lost.
- Peaking control apparatus embodying the invention includes signal source means for providing a luminance signal inclusive of a noise component and peaking means responsive to the luminance signal and to a peaking control signal supplied thereto for providing a variably peaked luminance output signal.
- a filter means having a passband inclusive of the noise component is coupled to the signal source means for providing a filtered luminance signal.
- Sampling means samples the filtered luminance signal solely during the horizontal blanking interval thereof to produce a sampled signal substantially devoid of active video components.
- a detector means responsive to the sampled signal, produces a detector output signal corresponding to the peaks of the sampled signal for providing a noise level indicating signal that is substantially independent of luminance signal transitions which occur during the horizontal blanking interval.
- a circuit means responsive to the noise level indicating signal supplies the peaking control signal to the peaking means.
- the apparatus includes control means for manually controlling peaking of the luminence signal.
- FIG. 1 is a block diagram of a television receiver including automatic peaking control apparatus embodying the invention
- FIGS. 2A-2E are waveform diagrams illustrating certain aspects of operation of the peaking control apparatus of FIG. 1;
- FIGS. 3 and 4 are schematic diagrams of a pulse counting detector and a peaking signal combiner, respectively, suitable for use in the peaking control apparatus of FIG. 1.
- the television receiver of FIG. 1 comprises a video signal processing unit 10 responsive to radio frequency (RF) television signals applied to an antenna input terminal 12 for generating (by means of suitable tuner, IF, detection and AGC circuits, not shown) a composite video signal comprising chrominance and luminance signal components.
- Terminal 12 may be coupled to an antenna for receiving RF signals which may vary in amplitude or it may be coupled to a video accessory (e.g., a disc or tape player) for receiving RF signals of relatively constant amplitude.
- RF radio frequency
- the composite video signal produced by processing unit 10 is coupled to a filter 14 (preferably, a comb filter) which separates the luminance and chrominance signals from the composite video signal.
- the chrominance signal is applied to a chrominance signal processing unit 16 which includes circuitry for deriving R-Y, B-Y and G-Y color difference signals from the chrominance signal.
- the luminance output signal of filter 14 is applied to a sync and deflection processing unit 18, to a luminance peaking circuit 20 and to input terminal 110 of a peaking control signal generator 100 (outlined in phantom).
- Unit 18 supplies horizontal and vertical blanking signals to a luminance amplifier unit 22, high voltage (H.V.) to a kinescope (not shown) and horizontal synchronizing signals to an input terminal 112 of generator 100 which has an output terminal 114 coupled to the peaking control input of circuit 20 for supplying a peaking control signal, SC, thereto.
- Circuit 20 varies the peaking of the luminance signal supplied to its other input in accordance with the level of signal SC (as will be explained in detail, subsequently) to supply a variably peaked output luminance signal to luminance amplifier 22 via a delay element 24.
- controllable luminance peaking circuits are given, for example, in the aforementioned Bingham patent (U.S. Pat. No. 3,919,714).
- delay element 24 is to equalize or compensate for delay differences between the chrominance and luminance signal processing channels of the receiver, thereby maintaining proper registration of reproduced images.
- Delay differences exist principally because of signal bandwidth differences between the two channels with the chrominance channel having the narrower bandwidth (e.g., 0.5 MHz or so) as compared with that of the luminance channel (e.g., 3-4 MHz or so).
- Delay element 24 may be a conventional delay line, CCD shift register or some other suitable delay means and may precede rather than follow luminance peaking circuit 20 in the luminance signal processing path of the receiver.
- Luminance amplifier 22 serves to amplify and otherwise process the variably peaked luminance signal to produce an output luminance signal, Y.
- the Y output signal and the R-Y, G-Y and B-Y color difference output signals of chrominance processor 16 are coupled to a kinescope driver 26 where they are matrixed to form R, G, and B color signals for driving the kinescope.
- the luminance and color difference signals may be matrixed in the kinescope as is known.
- a contrast control unit 28 is coupled to luminance amplifier 22 to control the amplitude of the luminance signal and thereby control the contrast of reproduced images.
- Contrast control unit 28 may also be coupled to chrominance processing unit 16 to control the amplitude of the chrominance signals and thereby control the color saturation level of reproduced images.
- a brightness control unit 30 is also coupled to luminance amplifier 22 to control the D.C. content of the luminance signal and thereby control the brightness of reproduced images.
- Peaking control signal generator 100 comprises a bandpass filter 116 having an input coupled to terminal 110 for receiving the luminance signal produced by filter 14 and an output for providing a bandpass filtered luminance output signal.
- filter 116 may have a center frequency of about 2.7 MHz and a bandwidth of a few hundred kilo-Hertz. Such a passband has been found sufficient to include the more objectional components of noise which may accompany the luminance signal.
- the passband of filter 116 be restricted to the midband portion of the luminance signal thereby reducing the effects of: (1) low frequency luminance signal changes; and (2) undesired high frequency components which may be in luminance signal (e.g., residual chrominance or sound carrier components).
- Such effects tend to undesirably bias the result of the noise measurement and it is the noise accompanying the luminance signal, not the luminance signal itself, which is of principal concern for purposes of the present invention.
- the filtered luminance signal produced by filter 116 is applied via a sample gate 118 and an amplifier/limiter circuit 120 to the input of a pulse forming and averaging detector 122.
- Gate 118 is controlled by a sample pulse forming network 124 having an input connected to terminal 112 for receiving horizontal synchronizing pulses.
- the function of network 124 is to enable gate 118 solely during the horizontal blanking interval of the luminance signal whereby gate 118 supplies a sampled luminance signal to amplifier/limiter 120 that is devoid of active video components of the luminance signal.
- network 124 may comprise a monostable multivibrator having a quasi-stable state less than the horizontal blanking interval and triggered by the horizontal synchronizing pulse supplied to terminal 112.
- the trigger pulse for pulse forming network 124 is delayed slightly (e.g., a microsecond or so) to assure that gate 118 samples only the central portion of the horizontal blanking interval to thereby provide a sample of the horizontal blanking interval which excludes leading and trailing edges of the blanking pulse.
- FIGS. 2A and 2B where (from FIG. 2B) it is seen that gate 118 is opened only during the central portion of the horizontal blanking interval of the luminance signal (FIG. 2A, times T1-T4).
- beginning and ending transitions of the horizontal blanking pulse as well as active video portions of the luminance signal are excluded from the noise measurement thereby producing a bandpass filtered and sampled luminance signal at the output of gate 118 as shown in FIG. 2C.
- the bandpass filtered and sampled luminance signal produced by gate 118 still includes components (i.e., the large spikes or pulses at times T2 and T3) representative of the leading and trailing edges of the sync tip interval of the horizontal blanking pulse as well as the desired noise component.
- These pulses are not representative of the noise level of the luminance signal and, if not compensated for, would undesirably tend to bias the noise measurement of the luminance signal.
- the effect of sync tip transitions during the sampling interval T1-T4 is minimized in generator 100 by use of a detector (122) of the pulse forming and averaging type.
- the sync tip transition pulses A or B do, in fact, influence the level of the detector output signal but since they are of short duration relative to the total sampling interval (T1-T4) the effect after averaging is minimal and thus the output of detector 122 is a noise level indicating signal that is substantially independent of luminance signal transitions which occur during the horizontal blanking interval.
- the output of gate 118 (FIG. 2C) is applied to detector 122 via amplifier/limiter 120 which amplifies both the noise accompanying the sampled signal and the pulses A and B caused by the luminance sync tip transitions. Large transitions of pulses A and B are limited or "clipped" in amplifier/limiter 120 so that in the resultant signal (FIG. 2D) the noise and the clipped pulses A and B are of comparable amplitudes.
- Detector 122 produces and averages pulses representative of peaks of the signal produced by amplifier/limiter 120 which exceed a first threshold level, Vt, to produce a noise level indicating signal, SN, represented by FIG. 2E.
- Vt a first threshold level
- SN noise level indicating signal
- sample gate 118 which is enabled (closed) only during the central portion of the horizontal blanking interval assures that the noise level indicating signal, SN, is devoid of any component occuring during the active video portion of the luminance signal as well as leading and trailing edges of the horizontal blanking pulse.
- Detector 122 forms pulses from the sampled signal and averages the pulses to produce a smoothed control signal, SN, representative of peaks of the sampled signal which exceed the threshold voltage Vt.
- the effect is minimal on signal SN because pulses A and B are of relatively short duration as compared with the sampling interval T1-T4 which includes the major portion of the horizontal blanking interval.
- the accuracy of the noise level indicating signal is further improved by amplification and limiting of the gated signal prior to detection which tends to further minimize the effect of the sync tip transition pulses A and B.
- the noise level indicating signal SN is combined in a peaking signal combiner 124 with a manual peaking control signal SM produced by a manual peaking control circuit 126 and the resultant peaking control signal SC is supplied to output terminal 114 for controlling luminance signal peaking circuit 20.
- the operation of combiner 124 is such that the peaking control signal SC is supplied to peaking control circuit 20 in a sense to decrease the peaking of the luminance signal for increases in the magnitude of the noise level indicating signal above a threshold level set by manual peaking control circuit 126.
- the purpose of circuit 126 is to allow the user of the receiver of FIG. 1 to set a preferred peaking level. When the noise exceeds the user set threshold level, combiner 124 decreases the peaking to soften the displayed image under such high noise conditions.
- FIG. 3 illustrates a suitable circuit implementation of detector 122 which provides the triple functions of: (1) detecting peaks of the signal produced by amplifier/limiter 120 which exceed the first threshold voltage Vt; (2) forming signal pulses from the detected peaks; and (3) smoothing the pulses to produce the noise level indicating signal SN.
- the circuit comprises a PNP transistor 302 having an emitter electrode connected to a terminal 304 for receiving a source of supply voltage +Vs (12 volts), a base electrode coupled via a capacitor 306 to an input terminal 308 for receiving the output signal (FIG. 2D) of amplifier/limiter 120 and a collector electrode coupled to an output terminal 310 and via a load resistor 312 and a smoothing capacitor 314 to ground.
- a resistor 318 is connected between the emitter and base electrodes of transistor 302. Suitable values for resistors 312 and 318 and capacitors 306 and 314 are indicated on the drawing.
- resistor 318 normally biases transistor 302 off. Negative excursions of the signal applied to terminal 308 which exceed the threshold voltage (Vbe) of transistor 302 turn transistor 302 on briefly to supply a pulse of charging current to smoothing capacitor 314. The duration of the current pulse is determined mainly by the product of the values of resistor 318 and coupling capacitor 306. Capacitor 314 accumulates and smoothes the current pulses produced by transistor 302 during the interval that gate 118 is closed, thereby producing an increase in output voltage at terminal 310 during the time interval T1-T4. When gate 118 is opened, no signal is applied to terminal 308 and capacitor 314 discharges at a relatively slow rate via resistor 312.
- FIG. 4 illustrates a suitable circuit implementation of manual peaking control 126 and peaking signal combiner 124 (each outlined in phantom).
- Control 126 comprises a potentiometer 402 connected between a supply voltage terminal 404 (for receiving a source of supply voltage +Vs) and ground.
- the wiper of potentiometer 402 provides a manual peaking control voltage to combiner 124 which is coupled via cascade connected complementary (PNP and NPN) emitter follower transistors 406 and 408 to a peaking control signal output terminal 410.
- the emitter of transistor 406 is connected to the base of transistor 408 and to terminal 404 via an emitter load resistor 411.
- the collector of transistor 408 is connected to terminal 404 and its emitter is connected to terminal 410 and, via an emitter load resistor 412, to ground.
- Collector voltage for transistor 406 is provided and controlled by means of a further emitter follower transistor 414 having an emitter electrode connected to the collector electrode of transistor 406 and to ground via an emitter load resistor 416.
- the collector and base electrodes of transistor 414 are respectively connected to supply terminal 404 and to a noise depeaking control signal input terminal 418. Suitable values for all resistors are indicated on the drawing.
- emitter follower transistor 414 controls the collector voltage of transistor 406 in proportion to the noise level indicating signal, SN, applied to terminal 418.
- SN noise level indicating signal
- transistors 406 and 408 couple SM to terminal 410, thereby controlling peaking of the luminance signal manually.
- the offset voltage (+Vbe) of transistor 406 is compensated for by the equal and opposite offset voltage (-Vbe) of transistor 408.
- transistor 406 When the noise accompanying the luminance signal increases to the extent that SN approaches the value of SM, transistor 406 will lack sufficient collector voltage to operate as an emitter follower and the output voltage at terminal 410 will therefore increase in accordance with further increases of the signal SN, thereby decreasing the luminance signal peaking.
- the signal SM thus controls the threshold of combiner 124 at which automatic depeaking occurs.
- Luminance signal peaking circuit 20 in this example of the invention is assumed to vary peaking inversely with the control SC.
- the signal SC may be inverted if circuit 20 is of a type which varies peaking directly with changes in the signal SC.
- Transistor 406 provides the dual functions of: (1) acting as an emitter follower when SN is less than SM for providing manual peaking control and; (2) acting as a comparator or analog gate for coupling SN to terminal 410 when SN exceeds SM.
- Transistors 414 and 406 may be replaced by a two input non-additive mixer if desired in a given application.
- the non-additive mixer may be of either the NPN or the PNP type depending on the desired polarity of the output signal or it may be a diode type of non-additive mixer.
- a non-additive mixer is a circuit which passes the greater, in a given sense, of two (or more) input signals to an output terminal and this is the function provided by transistors 414 and 406 in combiner 124.
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Abstract
Description
Claims (4)
Priority Applications (1)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| US06/288,627 US4376952A (en) | 1981-07-30 | 1981-07-30 | Noise responsive automatic peaking control apparatus |
Applications Claiming Priority (1)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| US06/288,627 US4376952A (en) | 1981-07-30 | 1981-07-30 | Noise responsive automatic peaking control apparatus |
Publications (1)
| Publication Number | Publication Date |
|---|---|
| US4376952A true US4376952A (en) | 1983-03-15 |
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Family Applications (1)
| Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| US06/288,627 Expired - Lifetime US4376952A (en) | 1981-07-30 | 1981-07-30 | Noise responsive automatic peaking control apparatus |
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| Country | Link |
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| US (1) | US4376952A (en) |
Cited By (18)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| FR2526254A1 (en) * | 1982-04-30 | 1983-11-04 | Rca Corp | DYNAMIC CIRCUIT FOR CREATING SIGNALS IN AN IMAGE REPRODUCTION SYSTEM |
| EP0059379A3 (en) * | 1981-02-27 | 1984-05-09 | Sanyo Electric Co., Ltd. | Noise detecting circuit and television receiver employing the same |
| US4496978A (en) * | 1981-02-27 | 1985-01-29 | Sanyo Electric Co., Ltd. | Noise detecting circuit and television receiver employing the same |
| US4630102A (en) * | 1984-10-10 | 1986-12-16 | Rca Corporation | Digital chroma overload system |
| US4636860A (en) * | 1983-08-26 | 1987-01-13 | U.S. Philips Corporation | Picture display device comprising a noise detector |
| US4644387A (en) * | 1985-04-25 | 1987-02-17 | Rca Corporation | Plural input television receiver having peaking circuit and chrominance band reject filter in a video signal channel |
| US4646152A (en) * | 1985-02-01 | 1987-02-24 | General Electric Company | Sharpness enhanced equal bandwidth luminance bandwidth compression system |
| US4821120A (en) * | 1985-06-13 | 1989-04-11 | Devon County Council | Television sub-carrier transmission |
| US4972263A (en) * | 1988-06-10 | 1990-11-20 | U.S. Philips Corporation | Video signal correction device |
| US5045926A (en) * | 1989-03-07 | 1991-09-03 | Sony Corporation | Television image display apparatus |
| US5581305A (en) * | 1992-01-21 | 1996-12-03 | Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. | Automatic picture quality compensating method and apparatus |
| US5822011A (en) * | 1995-09-15 | 1998-10-13 | Thomson Consumer Electronics, Inc. | Apparatus for detecting noise in a color video signal |
| US5956095A (en) * | 1996-05-30 | 1999-09-21 | Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd. | Noise suppression apparatus |
| US6002447A (en) * | 1996-03-07 | 1999-12-14 | Thomson Consumer Electronics, Inc. | Video signal processing apparatus |
| US6008862A (en) * | 1996-09-16 | 1999-12-28 | U.S. Philips Corporation | Perceived color transient improvement |
| RU2152136C1 (en) * | 1999-12-09 | 2000-06-27 | Беляев Виталий Сергеевич | Device for galvanic isolation and frequency correction of coaxial video transmission line |
| EP1646226A1 (en) * | 2004-10-06 | 2006-04-12 | Thomson Licensing | Video apparatus with controllable processing means and method for controlling the processing means |
| US7471344B1 (en) * | 1999-07-27 | 2008-12-30 | Mitsubishi Denki K.K. | Display apparatus periodically modulating image-signal characteristics |
Citations (6)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US3919714A (en) * | 1974-10-21 | 1975-11-11 | Rca Corp | Automatic peaking apparatus |
| US3971064A (en) * | 1971-02-16 | 1976-07-20 | Rca Corporation | Video de-peaking circuit in luminance channel in response to AGC signal |
| US3984631A (en) * | 1975-02-24 | 1976-10-05 | Warwick Electronics Inc. | Automatic peaking control circuit for low level T.V. signal reception |
| US4081836A (en) * | 1976-11-30 | 1978-03-28 | The Magnavox Company | Luminance signal processor for providing signal enhancement |
| US4090217A (en) * | 1976-08-23 | 1978-05-16 | Gte Laboratories Incorporated | Automatic sharpness control circuit for a television receiver |
| US4189755A (en) * | 1978-03-17 | 1980-02-19 | Microdyne Corporation | Television receiver threshold extension system by means of signal-to-noise control of bandwidth |
-
1981
- 1981-07-30 US US06/288,627 patent/US4376952A/en not_active Expired - Lifetime
Patent Citations (6)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US3971064A (en) * | 1971-02-16 | 1976-07-20 | Rca Corporation | Video de-peaking circuit in luminance channel in response to AGC signal |
| US3919714A (en) * | 1974-10-21 | 1975-11-11 | Rca Corp | Automatic peaking apparatus |
| US3984631A (en) * | 1975-02-24 | 1976-10-05 | Warwick Electronics Inc. | Automatic peaking control circuit for low level T.V. signal reception |
| US4090217A (en) * | 1976-08-23 | 1978-05-16 | Gte Laboratories Incorporated | Automatic sharpness control circuit for a television receiver |
| US4081836A (en) * | 1976-11-30 | 1978-03-28 | The Magnavox Company | Luminance signal processor for providing signal enhancement |
| US4189755A (en) * | 1978-03-17 | 1980-02-19 | Microdyne Corporation | Television receiver threshold extension system by means of signal-to-noise control of bandwidth |
Cited By (19)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| EP0059379A3 (en) * | 1981-02-27 | 1984-05-09 | Sanyo Electric Co., Ltd. | Noise detecting circuit and television receiver employing the same |
| US4496978A (en) * | 1981-02-27 | 1985-01-29 | Sanyo Electric Co., Ltd. | Noise detecting circuit and television receiver employing the same |
| FR2526254A1 (en) * | 1982-04-30 | 1983-11-04 | Rca Corp | DYNAMIC CIRCUIT FOR CREATING SIGNALS IN AN IMAGE REPRODUCTION SYSTEM |
| US4636860A (en) * | 1983-08-26 | 1987-01-13 | U.S. Philips Corporation | Picture display device comprising a noise detector |
| US4630102A (en) * | 1984-10-10 | 1986-12-16 | Rca Corporation | Digital chroma overload system |
| US4646152A (en) * | 1985-02-01 | 1987-02-24 | General Electric Company | Sharpness enhanced equal bandwidth luminance bandwidth compression system |
| US4644387A (en) * | 1985-04-25 | 1987-02-17 | Rca Corporation | Plural input television receiver having peaking circuit and chrominance band reject filter in a video signal channel |
| US4821120A (en) * | 1985-06-13 | 1989-04-11 | Devon County Council | Television sub-carrier transmission |
| US4972263A (en) * | 1988-06-10 | 1990-11-20 | U.S. Philips Corporation | Video signal correction device |
| US5045926A (en) * | 1989-03-07 | 1991-09-03 | Sony Corporation | Television image display apparatus |
| US5581305A (en) * | 1992-01-21 | 1996-12-03 | Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. | Automatic picture quality compensating method and apparatus |
| DE4240215B4 (en) * | 1992-01-21 | 2004-04-29 | Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd., Suwon | Automatic image quality compensation method and device therefor |
| US5822011A (en) * | 1995-09-15 | 1998-10-13 | Thomson Consumer Electronics, Inc. | Apparatus for detecting noise in a color video signal |
| US6002447A (en) * | 1996-03-07 | 1999-12-14 | Thomson Consumer Electronics, Inc. | Video signal processing apparatus |
| US5956095A (en) * | 1996-05-30 | 1999-09-21 | Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd. | Noise suppression apparatus |
| US6008862A (en) * | 1996-09-16 | 1999-12-28 | U.S. Philips Corporation | Perceived color transient improvement |
| US7471344B1 (en) * | 1999-07-27 | 2008-12-30 | Mitsubishi Denki K.K. | Display apparatus periodically modulating image-signal characteristics |
| RU2152136C1 (en) * | 1999-12-09 | 2000-06-27 | Беляев Виталий Сергеевич | Device for galvanic isolation and frequency correction of coaxial video transmission line |
| EP1646226A1 (en) * | 2004-10-06 | 2006-04-12 | Thomson Licensing | Video apparatus with controllable processing means and method for controlling the processing means |
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